Because they add so much value to the site
To answer the question in the title, questions that got this many votes usually really are great questions, even if they're short and don't seem to require much effort.
Sometimes they were much longer questions, that got edited down to a bare minimum by thoughtful curators. This was generally an improvement because it removed noise - for example, irrelevant attempts at solving a problem when a "how-to" question is being asked (those make the question worse because they attract debugging answers that are beside the point of the actual question). Of course, this process also naturally fixes spelling and grammar errors etc.
Yes, the voting can be drastically out of proportion to the work that was required. But life isn't fair.
Yes, the reputation awarded sometimes means that people with no real understanding of the site get privileges they aren't prepared to use properly. But that's a problem with the reputation system, not with voting behaviour.
The easy questions are often the most necessary
As I've previously argued (albeit on a newer Meta question), simple questions are useful and valuable simply because they are the most frequently asked. In every field, beginners greatly outnumber experts, and thus they drive demand for answers. The goal of Stack Overflow is certainly not to challenge (or nerd-snipe) the experts: it's to produce a useful Q&A library - and the utility of a service can only be fairly assessed by its users, not its providers.
Historically (i.e, going back well before Stack Overflow's foundation), the attitude of programmers, power users and other "technical" types has been that the "newbies" should learn to "RTFM" - i.e, that frequently asked questions should be self-answered by reading documentation. However, though it's true that reading (and searching) documentation is a skill unto itself that beginners should be made more aware of and take more seriously, traditional documentation often can't properly answer questions at all.
Why? Because traditionally, documentation only covers what the Diátaxis model calls "(technical) reference". This is a natural consequence of explaining the (library) code function-by-function, class-by-class etc. - whether that's done with comments, Python docstrings, separately written documentation etc. TFM often fails to be a proper manual.
Diátaxis vs. Q&A
The "tutorials" described in this model are generally not a good fit for Q&A - because the goal of a tutorial is hard to phrase as a question, and the resulting question isn't one that would ever actually be asked by the target audience. The entire point of writing a tutorial is to give direction to someone who doesn't know where to start (i.e., what questions to ask).
However, Q&A sites like Stack Overflow can add value to technical reference by filling in the corresponding how-to guides and explanations. I've said many times before that there are two main categories that capture almost every worthwhile Stack Overflow question: "how-to" questions and "why does this happen" questions (the sort that most people call "debugging questions", except that to my mind "debugging" is expected of the OP as it's part and parcel of creating a MRE.
Straightforwardly, "how-to" questions invite a "how-to guide", and "why" questions invite "explanation". So, really, the process of figuring out a proper set of close reasons was actually just us discovering this hip, new concept (I can find nothing about it from before late 2021) organically (and slowly and painfully), without putting a name to it. It also captures a historical instinct about what a good manual is supposed to be (a standard which is rarely met): everything except the tutorials (because those are better left to third parties who can generate ideas for them spontaneously).